The
Story of Oil:
Top 10 questions about the history, development,
and problems of oil
What is oil?
Designated fossil fuel in deference to its origins as organic
matter, petroleum is a substance formed by the decomposition of
tiny marine plants and animals. After they died, these sea life
forms fell to the bottom of the ocean and were covered by layers
of silt and sand. Eventually, heat and pressure over millions of
years transformed them into crude oil. Because the geological conditions
necessary to form oil are very specific, not all areas of the earth
that were once covered by oceans contain petroleum. Thus, special
technology is necessary to identify and extract oil from the ground.
The chemical and physical properties of crude oil vary. The oil
industry uses a “gravity scale” to evaluate the quality
of crude oil. Lighter, less dense crudes are easier to refine and
contain fewer impurities. They are labeled “sweet.”
By contrast, “sour” crude oil is lower in hydrocarbon
content and contains more sulfur. The density of the crude oil is
important because, in general, a lighter crude oil yields a higher
percentage of high-value products such as gasoline, heating oil,
diesel fuel and jet fuel.
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How did oil become a major fuel source?
In some areas, small quantities of oil naturally seep out of the
ground. Human beings have long recognized the utility of the seeped
oil and have employed it for a variety of purposes. For instance,
Native Americans used tar pitch to waterproof their canoes and early
Spanish settlers used it to seal their boots. Pioneers in Pennsylvania
skimmed seeped kerosene from riverbeds to use as lamp fuel and machinery
lubrication.
In response to the rising demand for kerosene in the 1800s, American
investors hired Edwin Drake to drill at the source of a natural
kerosene seep in 1859. The resulting oil well in Titusville, Pennsylvania
was 69.5 feet deep and produced 15-20 barrels of oil per day. Originally,
kerosene was the end-product and gasoline, the by-product, was discarded.
However, as the automotive industry developed to run on gasoline-powered
internal combustion engines, a permanent market for gasoline developed
and kerosene became a minor product. Pennsylvania remained the world
leader in oil production until 1901, when it was displaced by a
well in Spindletop, Texas that gushed oil at a rate of 100,000 barrels
per day initially. California, Oklahoma, and Alaskan oil wells also
proved to be prolific sources of oil in the United States. By World
War II, the United States was the world leader in oil exports and
the entire transportation sector was dependent on oil as a fuel
source.
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Where is the oil?
Several categories of oil sources exist today. According to the
Congressional Research Service, proven oil reserves are deposits
of crude oil in the ground that geological and engineering data
have demonstrated with reasonable certainty could be extracted using
existing technology. Oil exporting countries track their proven
reserve capacities carefully; Saudi Arabia has the largest reserve
capacity, followed by Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates.
When estimates include oil sands, a type of viscous oil that will
not flow unless heated or diluted, Canada ranks second in world-reserve
holdings. Proven reserves differ from surplus oil production capacity,
which is the amount that oil production could be increased without
any additional investment. Worldwide, surplus capacity was estimated
at 5.6 million barrels a day in 2002 but has fallen to slightly
less than 2 million barrels per day in 2006.
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How is oil extracted from the ground?
Advanced scientific knowledge and technology enables oil prospectors
to identify potential sites. Geologists take measurements in areas
with the appropriate characteristics in order to determine whether
the location might contain oil. If it seems likely, drilling begins.
Drillers then construct a derrick to store the tools and machinery
going into the oil well. Water or gas is pumped into the hole to
propel the oil to the surface. Though the first oil wells were on
land, today drilling can take place on the ocean floor as well.
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What is the process that turns crude oil
into useable products?
Once oil is extracted from the ground, it is sent to a refinery
to be developed into marketable products. Any given barrel of crude
oil contains a mix of hydrocarbons that make them suitable for different
uses. One barrel of crude oil (42 gallons) produces almost 45 gallons
of other products. This expansion, called process gain, results
from a reduction in the density of the crude oil during the refining.
The refining process consists of three phases. The first phase,
distillation, heats the crude oil and separates the heavier components
from the lighter ones. The second phase, called conversion, further
breaks up the hydrocarbon molecules to allow the refiner to produce
a higher proportion of light products (like gasoline). Finally,
the treatment phase removes impurities like sulfur from the lighter
fuels. The products derived from crude oil include petroleum gas
(such as butane or propane), gasoline, kerosene, diesel fuel, heating
oil, machinery lubrication, heavy fuel oil, and a variety of residual
products. For example, white petrolatum, the active ingredient in
Chapstick, is made from petroleum distillation leftover in the still
after the oil has been vaporized. Between 1975 and 2005, the United
States consistently refined between 14 million and 18 million barrels
of crude oil per day.
More than 40% of each barrel of crude oil in the United States
is used to make gasoline. After refinement, gasoline is shipped
via the 200,000 miles of pipelines to holding tanks in consumer
areas. Then, it is loaded onto trucks for delivery to individual
gas stations. Brand additives, used to differentiate commercial
gasoline brands, and ethanol components are blended inside the fuel
tankers while en route to their destinations. There are about 170,000
individual gas stations in the United States today.
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What are some of the factors that determine
gasoline prices?
Gasoline prices fluctuate for a variety of reasons. The cost of
crude oil on the world market plays a key role, of course, but the
weather and season, refinery processing costs, federal and state
gasoline taxes, environmental regulations, and marketing and transportation
costs also affect prices at the pump. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
in September of 2005 demonstrated how natural events affect gas
prices. Gas prices in August of 2005 averaged $2.53 per gallon;
by September the average had risen to $2.95. In addition, seasonal
demand for gasoline is naturally higher in the summer months when
children are out of school and families take driving trips. Finally,
new environmental regulations have forced oil companies to clean
up the pollutants their products contain, and the companies often
pass clean-up costs on to consumers.
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What percentage of US oil is imported?
Today, the United States uses 20.7 million barrels of oil per
day. Its net imports number about 12.4 million barrels, or 60%.
Nearly 98% of transportation vehicles in the United States depend
on oil products. Oil is also used to heat homes and businesses,
and as raw materials in manufacturing and industry, and (in small
quantities) to produce electricity. In 2005, the top five suppliers
to the United States in descending order were Canada, Mexico, Saudi
Arabia, Venezuela, and Nigeria.
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What is the world oil market?
Oil is a product traded on commodity-markets across the world.
It is generally measured in barrels of sweet light crude oil, and
is denominated in dollars for both buying and selling. Oil prices
are influenced by economic principles of supply and demand, which
are affected by factors such as the rapid rate of economic expansion
in developing countries (notably China and India), production and
refining capabilities, OPEC policies, and expectations about future
market conditions. In some countries, oil companies are state-run,
while other countries host a number of private-sector multinational
oil corporations. World oil consumption reached approximately 84
million barrels per day in 2005, and the United States made up about
one quarter of that demand - 20.7 million barrels per day (bpd).
If current consumption trends continue, world demand will reach
118 million bpd by 2030, while U.S. demand will approach 30 million
bpd. U.S. oil companies can only supply about 40% of U.S. demand
for oil. Thus, the United States has to import the other 60 %. For
this reason, the United States will remain vulnerable to disruptions
in the world oil market until it can supply its fuel consumption
needs independently.
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What is OPEC?
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, is
an institution comprised of oil-exporting countries. The organization
formed in 1960 with five original members, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi
Arabia, and Venezuela. Qatar, Indonesia, Libya, the United Arab
Emirates, Algeria, and Nigeria joined between 1960 and 1975. Ecuador
and Gabon participated for a time, but withdrew from membership
in the 1990s. Together these eleven states control more than two
thirds of the world’s proven oil reserves. OPEC’s organizational
goal is to influence the price of oil on global markets by setting
production quotas. By determining the amount of oil available on
the world market, the group can influence the global price of oil.
The economic law of supply and demand drives this calculation. If
a finite supply of oil exists at a given time, importers will be
unable to complain about prices for fear OPEC members will find
alternative buyers. It is for this reason that OPEC is often described
as a cartel. In practice however, transportation costs, refinery
capabilities, and strategic petroleum reserves act to mitigate OPEC’s
influence.
OPEC countries comprise approximately 40% of U.S. oil imports.
Therefore, political and/or economic instability in these countries
could result in fluctuations in the amount of oil produced and available
for sale to the United States and on the global market.
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What is the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
(SPR)?
The SPR is a federally-owned stockpile of crude oil maintained
as a hedge against disruptions in the oil market. Congress mandated
its creation in 1975 in response to the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973.
The reserve is located in salt caverns along the coast of the Gulf
of Mexico. Currently, the SPR contains close to 700 million barrels
of oil, or enough for between one and two months at current consumption
rates. However, Energy Policy Act of 2005 authorized expansion of
the reserve to its full capacity, 1 billion barrels of oil, and
the Department of Energy initiated the proceedings necessary to
select additional sites earlier this year. In the event of an energy
emergency, the President is authorized to withdraw crude oil and
sell it in a competitive bidding process. This has happened twice
since the construction of the facility, once during the Gulf War
in 1991 and again in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. In addition,
the Secretary of Energy announced that oil from the SPR would be
available to augment U.S. oil production in the wake of the Prudhoe
Bay supply disruption in Alaska.
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Source Information
Information for the Top Ten Oil Questions was derived primarily
from the Energy Information Administration, the Department of Energy’s
center for energy statistics, in particular the sections entitled,
“Petroleum Basics 101” and “Country Analysis Brief:
OPEC.” Further statistics are available at http://www.eia.doe.gov.
Other sources consulted for this report include: "The Prize:
The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power," by Daniel Yergin,
published by Simon & Shuster in 1991; "How Stuff Works:
Oil Refining," available at http://www.howstuffworks.com/oil-refining.htm;
the Paleontological Research Institution, available at http://www.priweb.org/ed/pgws/index.html;
CRS report RL31720 "Energy Policy: Conceptual Framework and
Continuing Issues," published May 11, 2006; and GAO report
GOA-06-668, "Issues Related to Potential Reductions in Venezuelan
Oil Production," published in June 2006 and available at http://www.lugar.senate.gov/energy/venezuela/pdf/GAO_Report_Venezuela.pdf.
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